snowseau wrote a review...
I really enjoyed this book! The vibes were impeccable and I was quickly pulled into the story. I'm always a sucker for fairy tale twists and retellings, so it's kind of shocking to me how long I let this sit on my shelf untouched - I can already imagine myself rereading this. There were a few twists (especially near the end) that I absolutely didn't see coming, but I was able to adapt pretty easily. There were a few moments in the narration when Liliwen contradicted something I thought we already knew, but it didn't take me out of the story. I definitely recommend listening to the audiobook.
snowseau finished a book

The Hound of Scrying Hollow
Brooke Marley Jones
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Hi Boundlings đ±
I've been looking far and wide for books that have characters with a father and daughter dynamic who aren't actually related. I'm thinking Joel and Ellie from The Last of Us or Gustave and Maelle from Expedition 33 đ„čđ«¶
Two characters that found one another and are sticking together as friends, as father and daughter, as found family.
It doesn't have to be the main focus of the book, just part of the characters đ«¶ Unfortunately, I find litfic quite boring đ so I am looking for fantasy, sci-fi, mystery or horror but I would check out litfic at this point as well. If anyone has a recommendation I'd love to hear it! đ„°
Post from the The Hound of Scrying Hollow forum
I definitely recommend listening to the audiobook for this one. Zura Johnson has such a soothing voice and she matches the story almost perfectly! The vibes are so good!
snowseau started reading...

The Hound of Scrying Hollow
Brooke Marley Jones
snowseau is interested in reading...

My Calamity Jane (The Lady Janies, #3)
Cynthia Hand
snowseau wrote a review...
If you told me last year that I would read Jane Eyre ghost-busting fanfiction, I definitely wouldn't have believed it. That said, this book was hilarious and was such a good time. It wasn't as good as My Lady Jane in my opinion, something I think was bound to happen in a humorous retelling of a classic instead of a humorous retelling of history. This book was a great palate cleanser, and I absolutely recommend it if you're looking for something between heavier reads.
snowseau finished a book

My Plain Jane (The Lady Janies, #2)
Cynthia Hand
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
So thanks to this app, I've taken to saying "Yoink" now whenever I see a book rec I want to read and being like "Yes that's my next read."
Well.... I got the word "Yoink" banned in a bookclub Discord I'm in đ€Ł A serious ban btw, when I type this phrase it says it is banned by the admins
And I don't know whether to be proud of this achievement or offended because I can no longer yoink all the recs, you know. What would can I use now to be like "Sigh, add to TBR."?

snowseau started reading...

My Plain Jane (The Lady Janies, #2)
Cynthia Hand
snowseau wrote a review...
I was expecting to enjoy this more, but I found that I just didn't care about what was happening. It was hard to stay focused, and when I put the book down, I didn't think about it at all like I normally do. I was confused about all the different Summers being mentioned, and I never knew which one we were talking about (which I suppose was the point). The premise had so much potential, but I just found it lacking in so many areas.
snowseau finished a book

An Accident of Dragons
Cheri Radke
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I've seen a lot of discussion recently online about how fast different people read and also the different ways people approach reading books and what effect that has on reading speed.
I saw a post which said some people only read dialogue in books and skipped descriptions which is fascinating to me so if that's you I would love to hear more about how you started doing that and if you enjoy books more now.
In a conversation with a friend they said that when they read, they hear each word in their head as if said aloud which is so different to how I read and I was wondering if maybe that affected reading speed.
I'd love to know how everyone processes words when reading and also if you consider yourself a fast or slow reader?
snowseau commented on a post
I read this book once (and never continued the series lol) in middle grade. I am now almost nineteen and I still hate everyone in this book with a burning passion. I'll finish it, because I enjoy the plot, but the characters make me want to burn it
snowseau commented on a post